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- Published: 02 Apr 2009
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Creature name | Pixie |
---|---|
Image name | Pixie by HaleyDavis.jpg |
Grouping | Mythological creature Fairy Sprite (creature) |
Possibilities | Hominid |
Country | United Kingdom |
Region | Cornwall, Devon |
Habitat | Moor, Forest, Cave, Garden |
First reported | In folklore |
They are usually depicted with pointed ears, and often wearing a green outfit and pointed hat. Sometimes their eyes are described as being pointed upwards at the temple ends. These, however, are Victorian Era conventions and not part of the older mythology.
In modern use, the term can be synonymous with fairies or sprites.
Pixie mythology seems to predate Christian presence in Britain. In the Christian era they were sometimes said to be the souls of children who had died un-baptized. By 1869 some were suggesting that the name pixie was a racial remnant of Pictic tribes who used to paint/tattoo their skin blue, an attribute often given to pixies. This suggestion is still met in contemporary writing, but there is no proven connection and the etymological connection is doubtful. Some 19th century researchers made more general claims about pixie origins, or have connected them with Puck, a mythological creature sometimes described as a fairy; the name Puck is also of uncertain origin.
Until the advent of more modern fiction, pixie mythology was localized to Britain. Some have noted similarities to "northern fairies", Germanic and Scandinavian fae, but pixies are distinguished from them by the myths and stories of Devon and Cornwall.
In the legends associated with Dartmoor, pixies (or piskeys) are said to disguise themselves as a bundle of rags to lure children into their play. The pixies of Dartmoor are fond of music and dancing and for riding on Dartmoor colts. These pixies are generally said to be helpful to normal humans, sometimes helping needy widows and others with housework. They are not completely benign however, as they have a reputation for misleading travelers (being "pixy-led", the remedy for which is to turn your coat inside out).
The queen of the Cornish pixies is said to be Joan the Wad (torch), and considered to be good luck. In Devon, pixies are said to be "invisibly small, and harmless or friendly to man."
In some of the legends and historical accounts they are presented as having near human stature. For instance, a member of the Elford family in Tavistock, Devon, successfully hid from Cromwell’s troops in a pixie house. Though the entrance has narrowed with time, the pixie house, a natural cavern on Sheep Tor, still is accessible.
At Buckland St. Mary, Somerset, pixies and fairies are said to have battled each other. Here the pixies were victorious and still visit the area, whilst the fairies are said to have left after their loss.
By the early 19th century their contact with 'normal' humans had diminished. In Samuel Drew’s 1824 book Cornwall one finds the observation: "The age of pixies, like that of chivalry, is gone. There is, perhaps, at present hardly a house they are reputed to visit. Even the fields and lanes which they formerly frequented seem to be nearly forsaken. Their music is rarely heard."
Pixie Day is an old tradition which takes place annually in the East Devon town of Ottery St. Mary in June. The day commemorates a legend of pixies being banished from the town to local caves known as the 'Pixie's Parlour'.
The Pixie Day legend originates from the early days of Christianity, when a local bishop decided to build a church in Otteri (Ottery St. Mary), and commissioned a set of bells to come from Wales, and to be escorted by monks on their journey.
On hearing of this, the pixies were worried, as they knew that once the bells were installed it would be the death knell of their rule over the land. So they cast a spell over the monks to redirect them from the road to Otteri to the road leading them to the cliff's edge at Sidmouth. Just as the monks were about to fall over the cliff, one of the monks stubbed his toe on a rock and said "God bless my soul" and the spell was broken.
The bells were then brought to Otteri and installed. However, the pixies' spell was not completely broken; each year on a day in June the 'pixies' come out and capture the town's bell ringers and imprison them in Pixies' Parlour to be rescued by the Vicar of Ottery St. Mary. This legend is re-enacted each year by the Cub and Brownie groups of Ottery St. Mary, with a specially constructed Pixies' Parlour in the Town Square (the original Pixie's Parlour can be found along the banks of the River Otter).
They are often ill-clothed or naked. In 1890, William Crossing noted a pixie's preference for bits of finery: "Indeed, a sort of weakness for finery exists among them, and a piece of ribbon appears to be ... highly prized by them." Lack of fashion sense has been taken by Rachael de Vienne, a modern fantasy writer, to mean that pixies generally go unclothed, though they are sensitive to human need for covering., In de Vienne's book, the main character, a pixie child, delights in ribbons made from her father's shirt.
Some pixies are said to steal children or to lead travellers astray. This seems to be a cross-over from fairy mythology and not originally attached to pixies; in 1850, Thomas Keightley observed that much of Devon pixie mythology may have originated from fairy myth. Pixies are said to reward consideration and punish neglect on the part of larger humans, for which Keightley gives examples. By their presence they bring blessings to those who are fond of them.
Pixies are drawn to horses, riding them for pleasure and making tangled ringlets in the manes of those horses they ride. They are "great explorers familiar with the caves of the ocean, the hidden sources of the streams and the recesses of the land."
Some find pixies to have a human origin or to "partake of human nature", in distinction to fairies whose mythology is traced to immaterial and malignant spirit forces. In some discussions pixies are presented as wingless, pygmy-like creatures, however this is probably a later accretion to the mythology.
One British scholar took pixie myth seriously enough to state his belief that "Pixies were evidently a smaller race, and, from the greater obscurity of the … tales about them, I believe them to have been an earlier race."
:‘Tis said their forms are tiny, yet ::All human ills they can subdue, :Or with a wand or amulet ::Can win a maiden’s heart for you; :And many a blessing know to stew ::To make to wedlock bright; :Give honour to the dainty crew, ::The Pixies are abroad tonight.
The late 19th century English poet Nora Chesson summarized pixie mythology fairly well in a poem entitled The Pixies. She gathered all the speculations and myths into verse:
:Have e’er you seen the Pixies, the fold not blest or banned? :They walk upon the waters; they sail upon the land, :They make the green grass greener where’er their footsteps fall, :The wildest hind in the forest comes at their call.
:They steal from bolted linneys, they milk the key at grass, :The maids are kissed a-milking, and no one hears them pass. :They flit from byre to stable and ride unbroken foals, :They seek out human lovers to win them souls.
:The Pixies know no sorrow, the Pixies feel no fear, :They take no care for harvest or seedtime of the year; :Age lays no finger on them, the reaper time goes by :The Pixies, they who change not, grow old or die.
:The Pixies though they love us, behold us pass away, :And are not sad for flowers they gathered yesterday, :To-day has crimson foxglove. :If purple hose-in-hose withered last night :To-morrow will have its rose.
She touches on all the essentials, including even more modern accretions. Pixies are "in-between", not cursed by God or especially blessed. They do the unexpected, they bless the land, and are forest creatures whom other wild creatures find alluring and non-threatening. They love humans, taking some for mates, and are nearly ageless. They are winged, flitting from place to place.
The Pixie Day tradition in Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s hometown of Ottery St Mary in East Devon was the inspiration for his poem Song of the Pixies.
The Victorian era writer Mary Elizabeth Whitcombe divided pixies in to tribes according to personality and deeds. Anna Eliza Bray suggested that pixies and fairies were distinct species.
In modern fiction the fantasy author Rachael de Vienne,
In Holly Black's and Tony Diterlizzi's Spiderwick Chronicles, pixies are green-skinned, human-sized fairies with shimmering wings. They have a command of glamour and a type of power to charm or seduce others. Holly Black has also written a book called Tithe in which the main character is a pixie.
In Eoin Colfer's Artemis Fowl series, pixies are one of a number of magical species that have been driven underground by humans and the pollution they have caused on Earth. Opal Koboi is the megalomaniac, genius pixie of . Colfer describes characteristics of pixies as having abnormally childish features and larger heads than other types of Fairies, with large but vulnerable brains (their cranial mass is thin, which makes them easy to knock out). They are also prone to headaches and, particularly in the case of Opal Koboi, violent mood swings and temper tantrums. Koboi is the perfect example of their genius turned to madness.
In Terry Pratchett's Discworld novels The Wee Free Men and A Hat Full of Sky, a race of kilt-wearing fairies, warriors named the Nac Mac Feegle, call themselves "Pictsies".
In Rachael de Vienne's, Pixie Warrior, pixies are winged females with wings that color to show their emotions. They seek husbands from among humans. They are four feet tall on average, and have a gestation of two weeks.
In J. K. Rowling's Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, Gilderoy Lockhart releases a cage of Cornish blue pixies into the classroom in an effort to teach the students how to defeat them in his Defense Against the Dark Arts class. Rowling's version of pixies are about 8 inches tall, electric blue in colour, and are wildly rambunctious tricksters.
In Kim Harrison's Rachel Morgan series, Rachel, a witch, works closely with Jenks, a pixie, to track down the missing, save various creatures, retrieve stolen objects, and defend the defenseless, etc. Jenks, his wife, and large family live in, tend, and protect Rachel's garden.
British rock band Alien Stash Tin included a short novelty song called "Bingo The Magic Pixie" as a bonus track on their 2007 debut album. Bingo is described as 'living alone' and making 'mushroom wine' which he shares with his friends.
Need, a series of novels by Carrie Jones, follows a struggle against malicious pixies in an urban fantasy setting.
Several characters in the Marvel comics universe have been called Pixie.
Neil Gaiman told tales of piskies in American Gods.
In The Fairly OddParents, the pixies are dull, wear grey suits, speak in monotone voices, wear pointy caps and, unlike the fairies, treat magic like a business. Instead of wands, they carry cellphones. The Head Pixie (H.P. for short), and the other male pixies are all voiced by Ben Stein. The female pixies are not seen. This is due to them being named after pixels.
Category:Cornish culture Category:Cornish folklore Category:Devon culture Category:Cornish legendary creatures
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